UK grid operator issues second heatwave power supply warning
Great Britain’s energy system operator raised the alarm over electricity supplies for the second time this week as a heatwave continued to test Europe’s energy markets. The National Energy System Operator (Neso) issued a notice late on Thursday asking generators to provide any extra electricity possible on Friday evening to meet rising demand from households using air conditioners and fans. By Friday afternoon, Neso struck a deal to pay £200 per megawatt-hour to import enough electricity from the continent to power the equivalent of 3 million typical UK homes, a rate almost three times the average power price in June last year. The operator said the call for extra power was due to forecasts showing “tight margins on the electricity system” from “the impact of extremely high temperatures affecting Great Britain and the continent.” Neso added that the electricity supply was not at risk, indicating a blackout was not imminent. The market warning was the second this week after Neso called for backup on Tuesday night before a rise in demand on Wednesday evening, when the high pressure heat dome that has led to Europe’s worst heatwave ever was forecast to slow wind speeds. The operator paid about £10 million for a few hours of electricity supplied on Wednesday evening, mostly to gas power plants, and similar high payments were expected for Friday evening. Several gas power plants in the UK have cut output because of the heat, and in France, four nuclear power plants reported unplanned outages because river water temperatures climbed too high to cool reactors.
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Sources: The Guardian
